This introduction to religion in America by one of the most influential scholars in the field gives students the benefit of the author's extensive scholarship and research, yet is written in a clear manner that is accessible for today's undergraduates. The book covers recent topics and events such as the Heaven's Gate cult, the Branch Davidians, the Christian Coalition, Promise Keeper, and the Grateful Dead.
Read this text for a Religion in American History course. The text was chock full of information, but I felt that Albanese introduced many new concepts to attempt to thread together the character of various religions, such as oneness, manyness, contracting, combinative, and so on. It would have been more useful to stick with the terminology of the religious studies field.
As a matter of personal taste, I also don't like survey books. I was reading about things I was really interested in from other classes, like the Berrigan brothers, but these things were only mentioned with a sentence or two in this text. Of course, that's the nature of survey texts.
Albanese definitely provides a lot of information on religions in America, the diversity within them, how they got to the US, and where all this might be heading.
For being a textbook, Albanese has remarkably lucid and interesting writing, which combines with the fascinating subject matter to produce an intriguing and engaging account of America's complicated relationship to religion and religions. I appreciated that Albanese takes a thematic approach to the material that enables consistent cross-cutting and analysis between ideas, religions, and people to show how the comprehensive picture of American religious identity has developed over time. All this being said, the form factor of the book itself makes for some pretty dry reading, but persisting through the boringly-designed page layouts is worth it for the excellent combinatory analysis that Albanese engages in and expands on in these pages.
Got this book for a class that I really loved on religions in America. Now, I use it as a quick reference book when I need to find out about a certain religion...for example...what do "7th Day Adventist's" believe again? Really well researched and understandable.
This is a reference or text book, I wouldn't recommend it as something to read just for fun.